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tv   Inside Politics With Dana Bash  CNN  April 3, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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we also have artists who appreciate ai paul mccartney recently said that he actually loved the technology because last year the beatles were able to release what he says. is there last song by taking a track that was recorded by john lennon decades ago and using it for a new song. so again, very innovative technology, but kill can't take away from the work and the bottom line for all of these artists lizbeth wagmeister reporting for us, elizabeth. thank you very, very much into our viewers. thanks very much for joining me here in the cnn newsroom. i'm wolf blitzer in washington. >> i'll be back later. tonight's 6:00 p.m. eastern in the situation room right here back tomorrow morning, 11th am eastern in the cnn newsroom. stay with cnn inside politics with dana bash starts right now
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>> today on inside politics, what future or americans more afraid of both donald trump and joe bin tried to win votes on what americans are most worried about trump stokes fears of american carnage at the hands of migrants. while five warns of an america where abortion is unavailable. and health care is at risk. plus joe biden puts out a blistering statement after the israeli government apologizes for unintentionally killing aid workers but some fellow democrats say words are no longer enough. >> and >> the special counsel does something remarkable. he puts pen to paper, blasting the judge presiding over the classified documents case for what he views as making basic mistakes that may cost him at trial i'm dana bash. let's go behind the headlines and inside politics up first, donald trump is betting that he can scare
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voters on what he calls migrant crime. he did choosing him in november >> i stand before you today, declare the joe biden's border bloodbath, and that's what it is. it's a bloodbath. they tried to use that term incorrectly on me two weeks ago. it's all about misinformation. that's all they do is cheat on elections and disinformation, misinformation fairly closely related those two words. it's a border bloodbath and it's destroying our country. it's a very bad thing happening let's get straight to cnn's alayna treene, elena >> well, dana, this is clearly messaging that trump is going to continue to use as he moves closer to november, he's leaning into his inflammatory incendiary and quite frankly, violent rhetoric to play on voters fears about immigrants. and i do want to be clear about what he's trying to do because it's the same type of strategy we saw him, you successfully in his 2016 campaign. he's de he's using dehumanizing language to describe
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undocumented immigrants as violent criminals, even though available data does not support the idea that migrants are contributing to increases in crime. and he's doing this real like to drive home. his point that biden isn't protecting americans with the way that he is handling the southern border. take a listen to what he said yesterday >> this is country changing its country threatening and it's country reckon they have wrecked our country. we will stop the plunder rape, slaughter, and destruction of our american suburb cities and towns the treasury will be raped, plundered, and robert baer to pay for welfare, free health care, free housing, food stamps, medicaid. i will end the carnage, bloodshed, and killing >> now, dana, he's clearly trying to paint this doomsday picture of america. and it also gets into how he framed his remarks yesterday, his campaign had labeled that first again event in michigan as quote biden's border bloodbath. again, their words. >> and it's a play on the
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language >> that trump received immense backlash for just a few weeks ago when he used the term bloodbath to describe the state of the auto industry and the country. if biden were to win in november and breonna, part of his strategy yesterday as well, which we have seen trump deploy on the trail before, is to use specif, specific stories of people who were killed by migrants who have entered the country illegally. trump is really seized on these high-profile to involve anything immigrants to try to make inroads in key battleground states. and i do think it's also important to point out here that this since the fear mongering that we're seeing is working polling shows that immigration and the border is a top issue for voters in several states, including those like michigan and wisconsin, that are hundreds of miles away from the sun, from the southern border >> yeah. i would just saw i played big in a new york special election. also, not very close to the sudden darn border. thank you so much for that. appreciated. and while as we just heard from orlando's report, trump is making immigration again, the cornerstone of his campaign.
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president biden is hoping the election is about something else health care, abortion rights. this morning, he is at the white house. he's actually speaking right now about what his administration has done on health care issues, specifically to lower the cost of prescription drugs. we're going to monitor the president as he speaks. in the meantime, i want to bring in my great panel discuss all of this in as priscilla alvarez, dave, why goal of semaphore and bloomberg and cnn's nia malika henderson nia, how do you see this as different from 2020 with regard to the framing of these issues i don't think trump is very different. how about biden aside from the obvious that roe was overturned? yeah. listen, i think we have >> seen in this post row world of this be an issue that really works for democrats. and you see biden trying to lean into what's happening on florida, what's happening all over the
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country. donald trump is now kinda has his back against the wall, right? he's talked about a 15 weeks and he's talked about a 16-week band. he now says that he is going to say something about this next week, we'll see if it's different than whatever else he said, but you can see the democrats really wanting to tie him in on the reality where we live now, which is the dobbs america, where there is a patchwork of abortion rights and restrictions in many, many states hey and so we'll see what happens. i think with, with trump. he is very much of the trump of 2016, right? with all the rhetoric and fear mongering. and you have democrats trying to say that abortion is part of a kind of radical agenda that trump republicans will bring to america. >> i don't >> think they hit that strongly enough all the time. i think that is i think the goal for them and you saw that work. i think and other elections, particularly in 2022. >> and dave, i want to bring >> up the heart of your piece
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today. or maybe it was yesterday, but it really goes on goes on to explain this bloodbath line from donald trump. trump has been warning about migrant crime and telling gruesome murder stories since he entered the 2016 presidential campaign. what's new this year, as seen in the blood bath messaging reboot is the confidence that doing this will cost him nothing. with non-white voters. that is so interesting, i wanted to talk about that and also something we see often from trump, which is kicking a term that democrats, the biden campaign used to say, look how we'll call horribly as he used the word bloodbath and trying to turn it on its head. and apply it to his opponent, right? >> which trump's started basically 48 hours after he made those remarks after the biden campaign started to attack, they released a video saying this and they had, this is also important for 2024, every republican who comment on the issue was using the same
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language you chip roy, who didn't even want to vote for trump in the primary, talked about biden's border bloodbath and republicans across the country. i point out in the piece that kelly aot running for governor new hampshire wasn't couldn't even bring yourself to support trump in 2016, is now running almost every day on the threat of quote, unquote migrant crime. and so the entire party moves is direction and that was really what would change in 2020 because he improved in south texas and south florida because we're proceeding highly go to the higher a florida. they have a road named after trump because he seemed to lose nothing with latino voters by talking this way it became safe for everyone in the party to talk about it politically from their view? >> well, 30,000 foot view here. there's a candidate that talks about things and violent terms, and there's a candidate that doesn't, that's where we see a lot of this rhetoric. now, when it comes to the use of bloodbath and migrant crime, et cetera. and latino voters ultimately, in talking to voters and going to some of these the president's rallies. they want solutions they kind of glaze over the redder. it is
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alarming to them, but they want to see a solution, something that former president donald trump said was every state is a border state. he's been saying that for while a lot of republicans have been saying that for a but frankly, they see he didn't a way that they didn't before people are seeing it in denver and new york city and washington, dc in philadelphia so you have these constituencies who are laying eyes on migrants in a way that they frankly did it before. and so they see this as mismanage. they see it as a problem. so while they take issue with the rhetoric, they ultimately want to see the white house provide some sort of solution and then in the absence of that, they also don't disagree with or they don't agree with the way that democrats and the president are handling the issue, and you're seeing it in large part. and i think we can't say this enough because of what the texas governor greg abbott exactly. right politically successfully, nevermind the actual policy, but politically he has had great success yeah, i'm sending migrants to blue cities, blue states use, you said that people who you talk to at biden events want
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solutions. let's talk about a new wall street journal poll, which comes up with a lot of the very important issues that voters are likely to go to the polls about and ranks them when it comes to trump versus biden the economy, trump is up by 20 immigration, not surprisingly trump is up by 20 abortion plus 12, protecting democracy. >> shocking >> well, is it shocking? because it's only plus one? yeah, you mean? yeah. i mean, yeah. shocking that he used only by close one no against a guy who tried to overthrow democracy of very violently on january 6. and this is something that democrats have been hitting. biden has given several speeches on this. they see this as a centerpiece of their efforts to get moderate voters independent voters, suburban women voters, some of the those nikki haley voters as well. and the idea that a biden is only up by one, i think is fairly shocking. the other number is not too shocking, right? you think about the
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economy you talked to voters. they do sincerely believe that the economy was better under donald trump. >> and >> this is, for decades, i think most voters have thought that republicans, more generally, we're better on the economy. and so, but that democratic number whose better with supporting democracy is quite shocking. it's >> alarming to you because that's a central >> tenant of the biden campaign is protecting democracy. that is how he relaunched or he launched his reelection bid. and so that's what they're banking on. an addition to abortion. so if economy and immigration continue to stack so high then that also requires that campaign to try to frame those issues. let's let's look at some of the battleground states that the wall street journal poll, north carolina trump is up by six, arizona trump is up, nevada, trump is up by four michigan pennsylvania, georgia. obviously you see it goes in descending order. wisconsin, where trump was yesterday tied >> right. and if you keep looking at that pole, 51% of people across those states have been positive view of how trump we governed as president, we
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have that let's put that up. yeah that is what the biden campaign is fighting again they may have got the rest of the year to try to change this, but there is a preponderance of views in the electorate that things were better when trump was president and everyday when you see the biden campaign doing especially on social media, literally flashing back four years ago and saying, remember this covid press conference, remember this thing that didn't work out. remember this trump's statement. they're trying to do that. i'm not sure sure. it's reaching the voters who skipped midterms get specials to vote in every election i'm not sure it's reaching them. that is their argument literally remember, we're having here for hunters and it's not just on social media. we're here anymore from senior members of the biden administration, including the first lady, listen to what she said this morning. >> always not losing and all the battle, but is coming up and he's even are doing better. so, you know what? once people start to focus in and they see their two choices, it's obvious that joe will win this election you know, you
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hear that a lot from campaign officials when it comes to these polling numbers wait until we get closer. what does it really mean now, even the way that he brings in surrogates former president barack obama really isn't expected to play in until after labor de so their sites are certainly said on september, october, when they expect to voters are going to be paying more attention. but in the meantime, it's all about messaging and reminding and seeing where that gets them. i just want to before we move on to a different part of our conversation look at crime because that really is the crux of where we started this segment about what donald trump is doing and claiming that crime is bad and saying that it's all about migrants. but even beyond that, look at what the fbi tells us. hard facts, hard numbers, murder, rape, burglary, violent crime, aggravated assault they're all down yeah. >> yeah, that was that was the last the fourth quarter of 2023. so not that long. yeah. i think that's right. i think of
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a problem that democrats have. is that there have been these high crimes, right? all random killings of folks and you have and donald trumpsomebody w nts to alify it when he went to michigfor stance he was talking about a crime, murderf a man there. and so that's thproblem. numbers don't really combat people's fear and emotions. and we know that donald trump iso od, it's stokg you totally set me up for something that i want to report now, whichs at his rally last night andhigan trump highlighted the case of ruby garcia, a michin woman who was allegedly murdered by undocumend immigran >> she as in a romaic latiship with, let's listen they said she had just as most contagious laughter. and when she walked into a room, she lit up that room and i've heard that from so many people i spoke to some of her family garcia sisters said that never happened. she told a local tv station that trump and his campaign have not contacted her
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or other relatives and slammed his effort to make her sister's case part of his campaign. no comment yet from the trump campaign coming up next brand new white house reaction to yesterday's israeli strike that. killed well, seven aid workers stay with us check >> we hear nothing. >> a space shuttle accidents, usually not one thing it's a series of events is that part of the wing coming apart >> space shuttle columbia, final flight premieres sunday at nine on cnn. >> okay. yeah, we got orders. come in, >> starting a business is never easy. a star and eight months pregnant, that's a different story. >> i >> couldn't slow down. we were starting a business from the ground up people were showing up left and right and so did our business needs the chase, a car made it easy when you go for something big like this, your kids said it and they believe they can do the same. >> arena unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase with the chase ink business on living
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airstrike that the idf says unintentionally killed seven un aid workers. but the administration is also making clear today that does not mean the president is easing up on support for israel's goal eliminating the hamas terror group while we make no bones about the fact that we have certain issues about some of the way things are being done we also made no bones about the fact that israel is going to continue to have american support for the fight that they're in to eliminate the threat from hamas that after a remarkable moment inside the white house last night, a meeting meant as outrage to muslim american leaders was interrupted when a >> palestinian american doctor walked out of a meeting with the president of the united split. they have the united states rather, he explained his decision to my colleague kaitlan collins it was very brief comments by the president saying he wants to hear from us and he wants to listen to us. and so i spoke first and i let him know that i am from a
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community that's really we are grieving. we are heart is broken out of respect for my community, out of respect for all of the people who have suffered and what have been killed in the process. i need to walk out of the meeting and i want to walk out with decision-makers and let them know what it feels like for somebody to say something and then walk away from them and not hear them out. >> want to talk more with the panel here about this. de waggle. we have seen at virtually every event that president biden has done and other members of the administration protesters come in recently. >> this is >> next level. it's inside the white house, a meeting with the president i've invited guests, and this was obviously an intentional form of protest. but but quite different from just somebody getting into a public event, right? yes. dr. ahmed the whole campaign, the whole ceasefire campaign has been very willing to work with the media. dr. ahmed was working with media communicating really almost
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minutes after this walkout happen. there is there is basically two factions to this movement. i couldn't say how big one the other is, one that is done with joe biden is not going to vote for him as our urged people to abandon the ticket completely. one that is trying to change policy by any means necessary. this kind of protest, i think there were at least five people who paid money to be hit the fundraiser in new york last week, who interrupted and they want to change policy had been their words before. it's too late this is six months this coming weekend since the war began, there arguing that you cannot win biden, joe biden cannot win the election unless he changes policy and they're being very forward and how they say this to the press. >> yeah. i mean, listen, this this is part of the beauty of america that people have an opportunity to either just outright protest or tried to change policy. and again, it's pretty remarkable that one of the protests got this close of an audience with the president to do it in private that way,
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jose andres, who of course is the founder of world central kitchen the organization that was in gaza trying to help feed them wrote an op-ed in the new york times today reading in part, prime minister benjamin netanyahu has said of these really killings of our team. it happens in war, it was a direct attack on clearly mark vehicles whose movements were known by the israeli defense forces. it was also a direct result of a policy that squeezed humanitarian aid to desperate levels. what are you hearing behind the scenes at the white house about how this incident, this horrific tragedy, might've changed things. i will just say that i have heard that in discussions that they're having with israel, that it's changed things. there. but this was an accident. it was unintentional and that they're thinking through different ways of prosecuting the war. >> there >> has been simmering tensions, there have been simmering frustrations. this really raised the frustration held by president biden and his top
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aides that this incident happened and that was very clear in his statement yesterday, he used the term outrage. that is one of the strongest terms but the white house has used and talking about israel's war against hamas. and they made clear and the national security council spokesperson this morning also made clear that they were frustrated by it, that they don't agree that it was the right thing to do that too many innocent civilians are dying and there's not enough humanitarian aid going in. but as you mentioned there at the top, that does not change their posture, that they still support israel. there are incidents, however, that just go too far. and of course, what's looming over all of this is that rafah operation and whether israel decides to move forward with that so far they haven't really budged and israeli delegation is expected to still come to washington in the coming week. to further discuss this. but it just goes to show that these moments can really just fuel this concern within the white house and the administration. i want you to listen to what senator bernie
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sanders said. he said it yesterday actually, he's at the white house right now and healthcare policy, but this just kinda gives a sense of the kind of pressure that president biden is getting >> israel does not have the right to kill to create a situation where they're stopping humanitarian aid from getting in the result of his children are starving to death, right? no. >> do we want to be complicit in that the answer in my view is most americans and what the polling shows us. moos americans do not want to be complicit with your question is, is it going to hurt the president unless he turns this around yeah. well listen, i mean, he sounds like a lot of democrats who are showing their displeasure in some of these primaries. we've seen, they're basically a voting against joe biden explicitly because of this policy are around gaza, around the war that israel is prosecuting in i think the real question about this incident it is it clearly took the westerners to die for it to be
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erasing level. there's something like 30,000 palestinians who have been killed in this effort. i think one big question is, does this change things? what do you say it changes things in terms of the idf's prosecution of the war navy. i'd possibly, but we'll see if this sort of changed the world so i will say i mean, obviously even before this there was the protests have gotten much more robust. >> and >> that's playing out on the electoral map at the ballot box just quickly in wisconsin, last night, we did see on the democratic side and the democratic presidential primary, obviously biden won over well, mainly, but something called uninstructed, which is effectively a protest vote got 8.3% i don't want to lose sight of the fact that there was also a protest vote on the republican side, donald trump doesn't have an opponent anymore. he got 78.9%. nikki haley got 12.7%, and ron desantis, guy welcome to write and this is that affection i was talking about that one to remain involved in the process
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that are urging people stay involved in the democratic primary, stay involved in the party. you can change the president. the numbers are actually higher in connecticut and rhode island where the option of protesting biden was on the ballot, had got a double digits in both states. very low double digits but that understates how much opposition there isn't the democratic base. gallup's polling in the last week showed its were down to about less than a quarter of democrats who agree with the way israel's prosecuting the war in gaza i don't think there's any issue that biden is running on right now or defending right now where he's this separated from his base not not not abortion up the economy, not immigration. none of that. this is the biggest problem for him within the party, not just with voters in dearborn or ever americans walk out of the white house with most democrats. they were very unhappy with how israel's prosecuted or it's changed completely from november when a lot of democrats were scared to talk about it thank you, guys. what a great discussion i learned a lot. appreciate it up next, the special counsel dices the judge handling the classified documents case and threatens to go over her head plus with friends like these,
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and get fast speeds and a reliable connection to all your devices in the home —even when everyone is online. i'm paula reid in washington and this is cnn >> hell hath no fury like a special counsel scorned late last night, jack smith hit send on a page turner, as far as legal documents go, smith, what all of his frustrations the judge, aileen cannon down in a court filing his annoyance that
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there is still no firm trial date for the classified documents case that her jury instructions seem dramatically tilted toward the former president that she's seemingly accepts lies from trump's defense as fact smith and his team event openly that the judge quote, legal legal premise is wrong so much so that premise would distort the trial. yet she has not scheduled this trial yet. cnn's paula reid, and elie honig join our conversation. paul, i'm just going to read one more bit. of this filing. he said it would be pure fiction to suggest that highly classified documents created by members of the intelligence community and military and presented to the president of the united states during his term in office were purely private. now, that is about the substance but it seems to me that his biggest frustration is with the process. >> yeah. and the judge, specifically, mhc is an inexperienced judge is a trump appointee. she's only been on
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the bench for a few years now. she's never handled a case like this and look down even giving her credit for the fact that this is unprecedented criminal case a lot of her decisions have come under considerable scrutiny like this one asking both sides to give instructions for a jury verdict ventral trial related to an act that he hasn't been charged under highly highly unusual, and it's a series of unusual decisions that she is made in and around this case. >> and le the biggest issue. well, one of the big issues that the special counsel has is the delay and the feeling clearly that the judge is playing into the defense strategy, which is to delay it so that it reaches november. and then we have the election and then maybe poof, it goes away. do how many sense that as part of that, he is setting the stage for a motion to get rid of the judge >> so jack smith clearly has had it with judge aileen
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cannon. i think that oozes out of this briefing, as you said, it's quite a sensational filing from a prosecutor. i do you think there is some frustration that's obvious with the pace of this, as well as the substance of it. now, one move that jack smith could make here and he sort of alluded to it in the briefing is a if the judge sticks by this ruling, if the judge says i am going to instruct the jury on this presidential records act offense then jack smith makes clear, i will appeal that and i will appeal it. now, the other thing that jack smith might do is ask the appeals court to remove judge cannon from the case. now that's quite a drastic step. it is very rarely, not never, but very rarely taken by prosecutors. and there's no assurance that they win. but the irony of all of this is if jack smith appeals this and if jack smith asked the appeals court to remove judge cannon that will delay this more than anything. that's happened so far. >> and apollo, you have actually spent time, unlike maybe ellie has. i certainly haven't had a chance to in a
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lot of the courtrooms that donald trump and his legal team have been on various cases that he's facing right now when it comes to aileen cannon, you mentioned that she's inexperienced. let me give a little bit of her background here. she was appointed by donald trump. just in 2020 she's been a federalist society member since 2005. no experience presided over presiding over class it's a fight cases. what's it like being in the courtroom with her? so when i was in the courtroom, what struck me issues, obviously very conscious of the fact that she's under enormous scrutiny. she knows that she clearly comes prepared with tough questions for both sides to at least give the appearance of being fair to everyone. but her inexperienced shows through i'm just talking about when you're in the courtroom, when the special counsel's office and trump's lawyers as they are known to do, sort of get into it and start getting a little petty, keeping the control that they'll control of her courtroom is something that she didn't demonstrate such a contrast to, for example, judge tanya chutkan, who oversees the
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other special counsel case here in dc. she has been on the bench for and years. she's not having any of it. she's able to keep things moving along very quickly and keep her courtroom under control. and then you see sort of what comes through in the filings or the lack thereof. i mean, aileen cannon still has over a dozen very significant motions and issues hanging out there based on what i've seen in the courtroom, based on what we've seen in the filings, it appeared here's it in some ways she's maybe just almost too afraid to make some of these decisions, understanding how much scrutiny she is. >> is it a friend >> or is it deliberate that is really one of the questions and elliana, bring you back in here just to remind people, it has been 34 days, 34 days since cannon held a hearing on scheduling the mar-a-lago documents, trial. we thought maybe we would here very shortly after that announcement, 34 days ago. and when the trial would be and here we are. >> yeah. i think the chances of this case being tried before
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the election are now approaching zero. even jack smith is acknowledging there's no way this case will be tried in may as it was originally scheduled. i agree with paul. i think the issue here is the judge's inexperience. i actually disagree with a narrative that's out there. the judge cannon is somehow in the bag or pulling for trump because she couldn't dismiss this charges. she actually rejected an argument by donald trump that these charges should be dismissed outright, but i do think that as judge cannons realizing now, it's not easy to manage these cases. it takes experience. you have to juggle a lot of different motions. they're complicated. you have to get get a lot done and i also agree with paul that judge chutkan in dc, who is more experienced both as a judge and in the courtroom, is showing much more command of the facts in the case in front of her. so look inexperience is a real issue here, and i think she's learning on the fly and it's probably not the ideal scenario for that paula la two of my favorite lawyers, and that says a lot. i know a lot of lawyers in washington coming up a liar
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and a fool that's how a fellow republican is describing house speaker mike johnson, manu raju is gonna be here after the break to tell us about that. you got to hear it next >> next stop >> stage what are they talking about lifetime. we will see you in fidic at fisher investments. we may look like other money managers, but were different. >> how so? >> we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client's best interests. >> so we don't >> sell any commission-based it's products. >> then how do you make money? we have a >> simple management fee structured, so we do better when our clients do better, the clients really come first, then >> yes, we make them a top priority by getting to know their finances, family, health, lifestyle, and more. >> wow maybe we are different at fisher investments were clearly different >> now, adt professionally
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raju has been following all of this drama on capitol hill. so mano she filed the potential of taking him out of the speaker's chair before they went away for recess than it sounded like she was kind of not going to act on that. and now, as she changed your mind again, what's going on? >> it's unclear exactly the timing of all remember just one member could call for the ouster of a sitting speaker if they decided to do that on the floor of the house, the house returns in discussion next week, we'll see if she decides to take a step, then or if she will wait. but this kind of rhetoric would seem unthinkable years ago. go on. one member of the conference attacking publicly the leader of their conference level on the speaker of the house. but that has become commonplace in this bitterly divided house republican majority in the aftermath of the ouster of kevin mccarthy last fall at that time, marjorie taylor greene was aligned with kevin mccarthy, but this time, much different with mike johnson and over his deal-cutting to keep the government open, his handling of that issue was propelled her to warn hey, hamm
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that she actually may push him out of office and speaking to steve bannon yesterday, she made clear that she may very well go ahead with this push not working for republicans. he is not helping republicans he's not even listening to republicans. he is doing the very dirty work of the deep for mike johnson to actually think that his republican conference support sending $60 to ukraine, see is a fool, stable and he's, he's a liar >> and that last point, so critical because mike johnson right now is weighing how to proceed with funding for ukraine emergency aid for ukraine. of course, this has been stalled in congress for months as senate has already acted on a separate ukraine package. now johnson is trying to figure out if there's something that could get republican support. but if you heard right there from marjorie taylor greene warning him not to move ahead on ukraine aid.
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but if she does decide to push them out, the question will be to dana, what do democrats do today decided? to save him and some of them say there's a price to saving them. and that's ukraine aid. >> i'm so glad you said that we've almost become numb to rhetoric like this from republicans like marjorie taylor greene against their leaders, even their speakers. and it is not, it is not normal or usual motto. i have to also ask about two members of the house to just disclose that they are battling some serious health issues. what can you tell us? >> yeah. raul grijalva. he's the arrows on a democratic longtime democratic just announced that he has cancer. he is 76 years old. his office has that he is battling this and that he is going to try to make a recovery through this being discovered, that he does have cancer and also lauren bulb bert she's much younger, 37 years old, but she just had underwent emergency surgery for a blood clot in her leg. and of course, this underscores the fragility of this narrowly divided house republican conference. it's unclear when
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bohbot will return, although her office as expected, to make a full recovery dana, my and i thank you so much for that. appreciate it. up next, president biden confronts demands from families who want to see their loved ones brought home loved ones who are still being held hostage. almost six months later by hamas in gaza, stay with us >> when i was 12 years old with cancer i spent most of the year looking at a hospital window all i wanted was to be outside i owe the people at st. jude everything because i am 17 years cancer-free my marathon is for st. jude and helping all those kids with cancer. just want to be kidding. i'm going to >> missing out on the things you love because of asthma get
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the latest flooring styles visit ll flooring.com now manu raju on capitol hill. >> and this is cnn >> 180 days. that's how long israeli hostages have been held captive in gaza since the october 7 hamas attack that includes at least six american citizens today in a powerful demonstration of frustration, family members of hostages stormed the public gallery of the knesset, israel's parliament opposition members can be heard echoing their chant. now i would agnes
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>> have an agnes here in the jewish groups are demanding more help from the white house. i'm doing now by rabbi moshe, how're of the orthodox union? he is leading an effort to deliver 180,000 letters to the white house today, urging the president to continue to stand with it israel and to demand the hostages be released. thank you so much for joining me. you said when you came to get ready that you believe that those 100, 180,000 letters have been delivered are being away right now. >> they're being delivered as we speak. now, i >> want to read part of the letter. it says april 3, 2024, which is today, marks 180 days since that black de 180 days of the unimaginable torture of those held hostage in gaza. please continue to stand strong with israel. it's the right thing to do today, and it will be long remembered. talk about your goal here.
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>> our goal is to have the moral voice, the moral clarity of president biden administration, which has been a critical, critical piece of support for israel and clarity for the world since october 7, the world has misunderstood the forums for resolving difficulties amongst nations like the united nations still doesn't even acknowledge the reality of the rape and brutalization of the women that happened hands of hamas. they have still not been able to come together to condemn their action. the president has been a strong voice, standing up for what's true and what's right focusing on the true humanitarian, most basic humanitarian issue here? which has the hostages. today. >> the amount of time and words that are spent on humanitarian issues are vastly disproportionate around the ambiguous question of, well, how much aid is getting in israel working to get it in? it is you're struggling on that story or this hostages is unambiguous. and yet it's being
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negotiated innocent children for murderers with blood on their hands we're trying to ask the president to restore moral clarity >> let me ask you about that. use the term moral clarity because 100 at 18, i don't need to tell you in hebrew is high, which means life and then the jewish faith every life matters and there is a contradiction between that belief and some of what we are seeing. and we know to be happening with regard to the retaliation and palestinian civilians, many of whom are children and they're not hamas terrorists. they're being killed are starving how do you as a faith leader, as a jewish leader, square that with the other bit of moral clarity, as you said, which is the need to destroy hamas and also get those hostages back? when you, when it comes to a life
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>> so we absolutely kai is not just a convenient, beautiful word or, or an emblem for a necklace hi, the value of life, cherishing life is a core, core value of our people. and we feel that it is perfectly on display president biden expressed yesterday that he was outraged and heartbroken over what happened to the workers of the world central kitchen. every jew, every israeli, is equally heartbroken over what happened to them and that's why in israel today, yesterday, there's investigation, there's figuring out how to do it better. there's figuring out how this, which was essentially a fan writ friendly fire incident, which doesn't just kill aid workers or innocent palestinians. many soldiers but what about an palestinians absolutely, absolutely. the israeli army is working with an ethic of trying in creative ways unprecedented
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ways in modern warfare and in a situation which hamas has created the impossibility of being able to separate them out by what they've done to try to preserve life recognize that israel is grieving over the loss of innocent civilians. hamas is celebrating as part of their strategy. they're not grieving over the death of the aid workers the death of the aid workers makes their case better because it makes israel look bad. they have put themselves to put citizens in harm's way. that's the difference between a culture of high, a culture that celebrates life that is trying to preserve life of course there's a primary value of priority that every society, including jewish, has. we have to preserve our own lives and we have an incredible value. i'm trying to preserve the lives of others rabbi moos, you're how're of the orthodox union. thank you so much for coming. appreciate it. thank you >> thank you so much for joining inside politics, cnn, news central starts after a quick break if you have wet amd
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